Province No. 1
Province No. 1 | |
---|---|
Province | |
Country | Nepal |
Area | |
• Total | 25,905 km2 (10,002 sq mi) |
Population (2011) | |
• Total | 4,534,943 |
• Density | 180/km2 (450/sq mi) |
Time zone | Nepal Time (UTC+5:45) |
Geocode | NP-ON |
Province No. 1 is the provisional designation of one of the provinces established by the new constitution of Nepal which was adopted on 20 September 2015.[1]
Introduction
The province No. 1 includes the snow fall capped peaks including Mt. Everest, Mt.Kangchenjunga, Mt. Makalu with Solukhumbu, Sankhuwasabha, and Taplejung districts towards the north, the jungle clad hill tracts of Okhaldhunga, Khotang, Bhojpur, Tehrathum, Ilam district and Panchthar in the Mid and the alluvial fertile plains of Udayapur, Sunsari, Morang and Jhapa.
Mountains
Mt. Everest, Kanchanjunga, Lhotse, Makalu and Cho Oyu are the main mountains of Province No. 1.
Protected Areas
Sagarmatha National Park, Makalu Barun National Park, Kanchanjunga Conservation Area and Koshi Tappu Wild Life Reserve are the main protected area of this region.
Geography
The Province No. 1 consists of about 25,905 square kilometers of area. This Province has three-fold geographical division: Himalayan in the north, Hilly in the middle and Terai in the southern part of Nepal, varying between an altitude of 60 m and 8,848 m.. Terai, extended from east to west, is made up of alluvial soil. To the west of Koshi River, in between Mahabharat and Churia, there elongates a valley called Inner Terai. Churai ranges, Mahabharat, hills of various height, basins, tars and valleys form hilly region. Some parts of this region are favourable for agriculture but some other parts are not. Himalayan region, in the north, consists of many mountains ranges. Mahalangur, Kumbhakarna, Umvek, Lumba Sumba and Janak are some of them. The highest mountain in the world, Mount Everest (8848 metre); and the third highest mountain, Kangchenjunga (8598 meters) lie in this Province.
Nepal’s lowest point, Kechana Kalan at 60 m, is located in the Jhapa district of this Province. There are many river basins and gentle slopes as well. Churai, Mahabharat, many basins, tars and valleys form the Terai region. Between the Churia and Mahabharat a low land of inner Terai exists. The Koshi river flows through the region with its seven tributaries like Indrawati, Likhu, Tamur, Dudh Kosi, Arun, Tamakoshi and Bhote Koshi (Sunkoshi). There are other rivers as well. Tundra vegetables, coniferous forest, deciduous monsoon forests and sub-tropical evergreen woods are vegetations found here. Sub-tropical, temperate, sub-temperate, and alpine and tundra types of climates are found here.
Districts
The province is made up of the following districts:
- Bhojpur District
- Dhankuta District
- Ilam District
- Jhapa District
- Khotang District
- Morang District
- Okhaldhunga District
- Panchthar District
- Sankhuwasabha District
- Solukhumbu District
- Sunsari District
- Taplejung District
- Terhathum District
- Udayapur District
Cities
The major cities of this Province are Biratnagar, Dharan, Itahari, Gaighat (Triyuga), Birtamod, Damak, Mechinagar, Bhadrapur, Inaruwa, Ilam, Dhankuta, Diktel and Okhaldhunga. Other notable places are Katari, Beltar, Namche Bazaar, the town near the base camp of Mt. Everest.
Tourism Spots
- Pathibhara Devi Temple, Taplejung
- Kanchenjungha, Taplejung
- Sagarmatha National Park, Solukhumbu
- Lukla Airport, Solukhumbu
- Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve, Sunsari, Saptari, Udayapur
- Namche Bazar, Solukhumbu
- Kanyam, Ilam
- Budha Subba Temple, Sunsari
- Bhedetar, Sunsari
- Halesi Mahadev Temple, Khotang District
- Barahachhetra, Sunsari
- Syanboche, Solukhumbu
- Biratnagar, Morang
- Ramdhuni, Sunsari
- Mai Pokhari , Ilam
- Shree Antu , Ilam
- Arjundhara , Jhapa
- Sukhani Danabari , Ilam
- Mt. Makalu , Sankhuwasabha
- Sava Pokhari , Sankhuwasabha
- Arun Valley , Sankhuwasabha
- Makalu Barun National Park , Sankhuwasabha
- Kharang Bazar , Sankhuwasabha
- Kimathanka , Sankhuwasabha
- Project of Arun Third , Sankhuwasabha
Mt.everest,8848,Solukhumbu
See also
- List of provinces of Nepal
- List of districts of Nepal
- Other provinces of Nepal
References
- ↑ "Nepal Provinces". statoids.com. Retrieved 2016-03-21.